Could some one help me before Ancestry shuts this website down. I would like to know When? I have a pretty good idea it was about 1912/1914 by a Nick Shafer. I would like to know where the brick were cast? I have been looking for the story for The New London Historical Society. Please help me if you can. Thank You.Arion Cole
I am not happy about this. I received the following message this morning. Please protest this short-sighted move, if you want. Perhaps if they hear from enough us, Ancestry will reverse course. To comment on this draconian move, send your message to rwmailinglists@ancestry.com or contact Ancestry via 1-800-615-6560. For other methods, such as mail, visit https://www.ancestry.com/corporate/contact-us. Aaron J. Hill aaronjhill.wordpress.com From RootsWeb Administration <rwmailinglists@ancestry.com> Tue 1/7/2020 9:36 AM Beginning March 2nd, 2020 the Mailing Lists functionality on RootsWeb will be discontinued. Users will no longer be able to send outgoing emails or accept incoming emails. Additionally, administration tools will no longer be available to list administrators and mailing lists will be put into an archival state. Administrators may save the emails in their list prior to March 2nd. After that, mailing list archives will remain available and searchable on RootsWeb. As an alternative to RootsWeb Mailing Lists, Ancestry message boards are a great option to network with others in the genealogy community. Message boards are available for free with an Ancestry registered account. Thank you for being part of the RootsWeb family and contributing to this community. Sincerely, The RootsWeb team
Hi Neighboring Counties of these Counties: Ohio Counties: Adams (1933-1952); Ashland (1899-1911); Athens (1848-1879); Auglaize (1885-1892); Brown (1849-1869); Butler (1851-1864); Carroll (1843-1847); Darke (1818-1838); Franklin (1803-1849) http://www.sampubco.com/wills/oh/ohio.htm And that is not all - as there are other states, too. and FREE browsing, check those spelling variants (differences), too. Links provided to images. W David Samuelsen SAMPUBCO
I'm looking for the 1857 burial place of Hannah Ada Floretta Jane(VAN SCOY) BENNETT. I'm asking this in order to place at her grave amarker recognizing her as the daughter of a War of 1812 veteran,Abraham Van Scoy. According to an 1883 letter from her brother B[ishop] K[napp] VanScoy to their brother-in-law and sister Joseph and Abigail Eddy,Hannah A. F. J. Vanscoy was born 10 April 1839 and Hannah A. F. J.Bennet died 28 August 1857 at age 18 years, 4 months, 18 days. In the 1850 census she is listed in Greenwich Township, HuronCounty, Ohio, with her mother and some of her brothers and sisters:Mary Vanscoy, 55, New York; George, 27, Ohio; Abram, 23, Ohio;Harriet, 20, Pennsylvania; Bishop, 17, Ohio; Helen [Helon], 14, Ohio;Hannah, 11, Ohio. Her marriage is recorded in Huron County, Ohio, where she marriedJohn Bennett 15 September 1855. The 1924 issue of Pioneer Women of the Western Reserve says shewas born in Greenwich Township [Huron County, Ohio] and that herlast residence was Richland County [Ohio]. Hannah Ada Floretta Jane Van Scoy and her brother Bishop Knapp VanScoy married brother and sister John Bennett and Rachel Ann Bennett. >From other sources we know that John Bennett was born inneighboring Butler Township, Richland County, Ohio, and was the sonof John Bennett and Sarah FREEMAN. The younger John later marriedHarriett POOLE (in 1862) and Alice Amanda BOYER. His second andthird marriages and his death are recorded in Eaton County, Michigan. The elder John is living in Richland County, Ohio, at the 1860census. The family is John Bennett, 64; Sarah, 59; Edmond, 20; andEvaline, 19. I haven't found the younger John Bennett in the 1860census. (He is in Eaton County, Michigan, in the census records for1870, 1880, 1900, and 1910.) I'm guessing that Hannah is buried in the Nineveh Cemetery,Greenwich Township, Huron County, Ohio, where her parents Abraham andMary Van Scoy, brother-in-law James DURY, brothers George WashingtonVan Scoy and Bishop Knapp Van Scoy, and sister Alice Irena (Van Scoy)(Fancher) PENNELL are buried. I have not found a monument for her inNineveh or an entry for her in the published Huron County cemeterytranscriptions. However she might be buried with members of her husband's Bennettfamily in northern Richland County. Frances Van Scoy, FrancesVanScoy@aol.com Van Scoy-Knapp reunion, vsk03@aol.com
Thank you for taking the time (and using a creative approach) to find a recent photo of my great-grandfather's house! Frank Marvin's grandsons later owned Van Scoy Tractor Sales, located on South Kniffen in a former Friends meeting house (now a hardware store). They sold Minneapolis Moline and New Idea tractors and implements. I have first-hand knowledge of that business. Their father Ed Van Scoy was still farming with horses in the late 1920s, so I'm guessing Frank Marvin around 1910 sold implements but not tractors. ("vsk03" stands for "Van Scoy-Knapp reunion 2003" which we revived in 2003 after a hiatus of about 40 years. I use that address for reunion-related genealogy.) Frances Van Scoy -----Original Message----- From: gloria ishida <gfb-ishida@gol.com> To: vsk03 <vsk03@aol.com>; ohhuron <ohhuron@rootsweb.com> Cc: FrancesVanScoy <FrancesVanScoy@aol.com> Sent: Sun, Jul 10, 2016 1:49 am Subject: Frank Martin house Hi, Always curious. I think I found the Frank Martin house unless numbering has changed. Looking at some exterior change it could fit 1910 decade. First I went to Greenwich old photos and came up with an old postcard that showed a church; next to google earth. E. Main, Greenwich is the only street available. Wonder of wonders the old church still exists - United Methodist and got the address of 19 E. Main. So took a “drive”, up and down the for awhile, checking landmarks, that is, commercial properties. Found the Shell Gas Station, among others, googled and found the address, 45 E. Main. Thought maybe the house would have been torn down. But looked at the next house anyhow, enlarged it and saw 47. Later just put the address in google and it seems to be up for sale. No “built in” listed. You might get in touch with the realtor for more information including how to get the records from the past. Gloria Ishida Re-sending text only here. Working on two different computers so made a mistake on the roots web address. Message with attachment (photo of possible house) went to “vsko3” and Frances VanScoy. “Housework is a treadmill from futility to oblivion with stop-offs at tedium and counter productivity.” ― Erma Bombeck
Hi, Always curious. I think I found the Frank Martin house unless numbering has changed. Looking at some exterior change it could fit 1910 decade. First I went to Greenwich old photos and came up with an old postcard that showed a church; next to google earth. E. Main, Greenwich is the only street available. Wonder of wonders the old church still exists - United Methodist and got the address of 19 E. Main. So took a “drive”, up and down the for awhile, checking landmarks, that is, commercial properties. Found the Shell Gas Station, among others, googled and found the address, 45 E. Main. Thought maybe the house would have been torn down. But looked at the next house anyhow, enlarged it and saw 47. Later just put the address in google and it seems to be up for sale. No “built in” listed. You might get in touch with the realtor for more information including how to get the records from the past. Gloria Ishida Re-sending text only here. Working on two different computers so made a mistake on the roots web address. Message with attachment (photo of possible house) went to “vsko3” and Frances VanScoy. “Housework is a treadmill from futility to oblivion with stop-offs at tedium and counter productivity.” ― Erma Bombeck
I am hope our Member LEE is at the July 18th meeting, he would have some idea, as his family was in Greenwich from late 1800's.. Yes lots has changed, but some homes still remain.. -----Original Message----- From: ohhuron-request <ohhuron-request@rootsweb.com> To: ohhuron <ohhuron@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sun, Jul 10, 2016 3:06 am Subject: OHHURON Digest, Vol 11, Issue 5 Today's Topics: 1. Frank Marvin's farm implement dealership in Greenwich 1905 - between 1910 and 1919 (vsk03@aol.com) 2. Re: Frank Marvin's farm implement dealership in Greenwich 1905 - between 1910 and 1919 (vsk03@aol.com) 3. Frank Martin house (gloria ishida) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Sat, 9 Jul 2016 11:39:55 -0400 From: vsk03@aol.com Subject: [OHHURON] Frank Marvin's farm implement dealership in Greenwich 1905 - between 1910 and 1919 To: ohhuron@rootsweb.com Cc: vsk03@aol.com, FrancesVanScoy@aol.com Message-ID: <155d050a7e0-2956-1f193@webprd-a81.mail.aol.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 I'm looking for information on Frank Marvin's farm implementbusiness in Greenwich that began in 1905. The obituary of Francis Marion Marvin (1857-1919) says "Shortlyafter marriage he moved with his wife to a farm in Richland Countywhere he lived until he removed to a farm in Huron County in 1901. He lived on this farm until 1905 when he moved to Greenwich andbecame engaged in the implement business which he continued for anumber of years." (I don't know the name of the newspaper.) In the 1910 census he is living on East Main Street in GreenwichVillage and is working as a farm implement dealer (self-employed). I think his house was on lots 310 and/or 311 "in BenjaminKniffin's Addition to west Greenwich, Ohio" based on a 1920 deedfrom his heirs in Huron County Deed Record, volume 109, pages253-254, but I haven't figured out the street address. I don't knowwhether his business was also located there. ------------------------------ Message: 2 Date: Sat, 9 Jul 2016 14:28:19 -0400 From: vsk03@aol.com Subject: Re: [OHHURON] Frank Marvin's farm implement dealership in Greenwich 1905 - between 1910 and 1919 To: vsk03@aol.com, ohhuron@rootsweb.com Cc: FrancesVanScoy@aol.com Message-ID: <155d0ead78d-58c8-1f784@webprd-a75.mail.aol.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 Partial success. I've found the 1908 Huron County Directory online at https://archive.org/details/huroncountydirec00unse and found in it their residence and his business location. -----Original Message----- From: vsk03 <vsk03@aol.com> To: ohhuron <ohhuron@rootsweb.com> Cc: vsk03 <vsk03@aol.com>; FrancesVanScoy <FrancesVanScoy@aol.com> Sent: Sat, Jul 9, 2016 11:39 am Subject: Frank Marvin's farm implement dealership in Greenwich 1905 - between 1910 and 1919 I'm looking for information on Frank Marvin's farm implementbusiness in Greenwich that began in 1905. The obituary of Francis Marion Marvin (1857-1919) says "Shortlyafter marriage he moved with his wife to a farm in Richland Countywhere he lived until he removed to a farm in Huron County in 1901. He lived on this farm until 1905 when he moved to Greenwich andbecame engaged in the implement business which he continued for anumber of years." (I don't know the name of the newspaper.) In the 1910 census he is living on East Main Street in GreenwichVillage and is working as a farm implement dealer (self-employed). I think his house was on lots 310 and/or 311 "in BenjaminKniffin's Addition to west Greenwich, Ohio" based on a 1920 deedfrom his heirs in Huron County Deed Record, volume 109, pages253-254, but I haven't figured out the street address. I don't knowwhether his business was also located there. ------------------------------ Message: 3 Date: Sun, 10 Jul 2016 14:49:00 +0900 From: gloria ishida <gfb-ishida@gol.com> Subject: [OHHURON] Frank Martin house To: vsk03@aol.com, ohhuron@rootsweb.com Cc: FrancesVanScoy@aol.com Message-ID: <44EB05DC-AE8F-4706-A1EC-812BC431F900@gol.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 Hi, Always curious. I think I found the Frank Martin house unless numbering has changed. Looking at some exterior change it could fit 1910 decade. First I went to Greenwich old photos and came up with an old postcard that showed a church; next to google earth. E. Main, Greenwich is the only street available. Wonder of wonders the old church still exists - United Methodist and got the address of 19 E. Main. So took a ?drive?, up and down the for awhile, checking landmarks, that is, commercial properties. Found the Shell Gas Station, among others, googled and found the address, 45 E. Main. Thought maybe the house would have been torn down. But looked at the next house anyhow, enlarged it and saw 47. Later just put the address in google and it seems to be up for sale. No ?built in? listed. You might get in touch with the realtor for more information including how to get the records from the past. Gloria Ishida Re-sending text only here. Working on two different computers so made a mistake on the roots web address. Message with attachment (photo of possible house) went to ?vsko3? and Frances VanScoy. ?Housework is a treadmill from futility to oblivion with stop-offs at tedium and counter productivity.? ? Erma Bombeck ------------------------------ To contact the OHHURON list administrator, send an email to OHHURON-admin@rootsweb.com. To post a message to the OHHURON mailing list, send an email to OHHURON@rootsweb.com. __________________________________________________________ To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to OHHURON-request@rootsweb.com with the word "unsubscribe" without the quotes in the subject and the body of the email with no additional text. End of OHHURON Digest, Vol 11, Issue 5 **************************************
Partial success. I've found the 1908 Huron County Directory online at https://archive.org/details/huroncountydirec00unse and found in it their residence and his business location. -----Original Message----- From: vsk03 <vsk03@aol.com> To: ohhuron <ohhuron@rootsweb.com> Cc: vsk03 <vsk03@aol.com>; FrancesVanScoy <FrancesVanScoy@aol.com> Sent: Sat, Jul 9, 2016 11:39 am Subject: Frank Marvin's farm implement dealership in Greenwich 1905 - between 1910 and 1919 I'm looking for information on Frank Marvin's farm implementbusiness in Greenwich that began in 1905. The obituary of Francis Marion Marvin (1857-1919) says "Shortlyafter marriage he moved with his wife to a farm in Richland Countywhere he lived until he removed to a farm in Huron County in 1901. He lived on this farm until 1905 when he moved to Greenwich andbecame engaged in the implement business which he continued for anumber of years." (I don't know the name of the newspaper.) In the 1910 census he is living on East Main Street in GreenwichVillage and is working as a farm implement dealer (self-employed). I think his house was on lots 310 and/or 311 "in BenjaminKniffin's Addition to west Greenwich, Ohio" based on a 1920 deedfrom his heirs in Huron County Deed Record, volume 109, pages253-254, but I haven't figured out the street address. I don't knowwhether his business was also located there.
I'm looking for information on Frank Marvin's farm implementbusiness in Greenwich that began in 1905. The obituary of Francis Marion Marvin (1857-1919) says "Shortlyafter marriage he moved with his wife to a farm in Richland Countywhere he lived until he removed to a farm in Huron County in 1901. He lived on this farm until 1905 when he moved to Greenwich andbecame engaged in the implement business which he continued for anumber of years." (I don't know the name of the newspaper.) In the 1910 census he is living on East Main Street in GreenwichVillage and is working as a farm implement dealer (self-employed). I think his house was on lots 310 and/or 311 "in BenjaminKniffin's Addition to west Greenwich, Ohio" based on a 1920 deedfrom his heirs in Huron County Deed Record, volume 109, pages253-254, but I haven't figured out the street address. I don't knowwhether his business was also located there.
Aaron, Everything I can access leads me to "newspapers" that requires a subscription. But I was able to get a partial image for your 1836 date that shows Court of Common Pleas, (Eliz)abeth A. Darling vs. (Jose?)ph Darling, Sr. and (???) Darling et al.. Sorry, I couldn't be of more help. Gloria Ishida On May 31, 2016, at 12:22 PM, Aaron Hill via wrote: > I found some mentions of the name DARLING and would like to read the content. > > > Darling (court case?) > > https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/9394634/ > > January 19, 1836 > Huron Reflector from Norwalk, Ohio · Page 4 > > Publication: > Huron Reflector > Location: > Norwalk, Ohio > Issue Date: > Tuesday, January 19, 1836 > Page: > Page 4 > > Tuesday, January 5, 1836 > https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/9394605/ > > http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=7358 > > October 23, 1824 > The Sandusky Clarion from Sandusky, Ohio · Page 1 > > Publication: > The Sandusky Clarion > Location: > Sandusky, Ohio > Issue Date: > Saturday, October 23, 1824 > Page: > Page 1 > https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/37052218/ > > > Aaron Hill > > Seattle > > ________________________________ > From: Bonita Hillmer <ladybonita@usa.com> > Sent: Tuesday, May 31, 2016 3:01:37 AM > To: Aaron Hill; ohhuron@rootsweb.com > Subject: RE: [OHHURON] Huron Reflector on Ancestry > > What are you looking for? > > > > > Bonita Hillmer > ladybonita@usa.com > > > -------- Original message -------- > From: Aaron Hill via <ohhuron@rootsweb.com> > Date: 05/30/2016 6:09 PM (GMT-08:00) > To: OHHURON@rootsweb.com > Subject: [OHHURON] Huron Reflector on Ancestry > > I am trying to access the Huron Reflector on Ancestry at the library, but the direct link requires a login and, after accessing the site through the library, I cannot find the newspaper. Anyone know how to access it via a library subscription? > > Huron Reflector (Norwalk, Ohio) > The Huron Reflector newspaper was located in Norwalk, Ohio. This database is a fully searchable text version of the newspaper for the following years: 1830-53 and 1862. > http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=7358 > > Aaron Hill > Seattle > > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to OHHURON-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to OHHURON-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message “Housework is a treadmill from futility to oblivion with stop-offs at tedium and counter productivity.” ― Erma Bombeck
I found some mentions of the name DARLING and would like to read the content. Darling (court case?) https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/9394634/ January 19, 1836 Huron Reflector from Norwalk, Ohio · Page 4 Publication: Huron Reflector Location: Norwalk, Ohio Issue Date: Tuesday, January 19, 1836 Page: Page 4 Tuesday, January 5, 1836 https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/9394605/ http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=7358 October 23, 1824 The Sandusky Clarion from Sandusky, Ohio · Page 1 Publication: The Sandusky Clarion Location: Sandusky, Ohio Issue Date: Saturday, October 23, 1824 Page: Page 1 https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/37052218/ Aaron Hill Seattle ________________________________ From: Bonita Hillmer <ladybonita@usa.com> Sent: Tuesday, May 31, 2016 3:01:37 AM To: Aaron Hill; ohhuron@rootsweb.com Subject: RE: [OHHURON] Huron Reflector on Ancestry What are you looking for? Bonita Hillmer ladybonita@usa.com -------- Original message -------- From: Aaron Hill via <ohhuron@rootsweb.com> Date: 05/30/2016 6:09 PM (GMT-08:00) To: OHHURON@rootsweb.com Subject: [OHHURON] Huron Reflector on Ancestry I am trying to access the Huron Reflector on Ancestry at the library, but the direct link requires a login and, after accessing the site through the library, I cannot find the newspaper. Anyone know how to access it via a library subscription? Huron Reflector (Norwalk, Ohio) The Huron Reflector newspaper was located in Norwalk, Ohio. This database is a fully searchable text version of the newspaper for the following years: 1830-53 and 1862. http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=7358 Aaron Hill Seattle ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to OHHURON-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
I am trying to access the Huron Reflector on Ancestry at the library, but the direct link requires a login and, after accessing the site through the library, I cannot find the newspaper. Anyone know how to access it via a library subscription? Huron Reflector (Norwalk, Ohio) The Huron Reflector newspaper was located in Norwalk, Ohio. This database is a fully searchable text version of the newspaper for the following years: 1830-53 and 1862. http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=7358 Aaron Hill Seattle
try FamilySearch's Family History Center to access. David Samuelsen On 5/30/2016 7:09 PM, Aaron Hill via wrote: > I am trying to access the Huron Reflector on Ancestry at the library, but the direct link requires a login and, after accessing the site through the library, I cannot find the newspaper. Anyone know how to access it via a library subscription? > > Huron Reflector (Norwalk, Ohio) > The Huron Reflector newspaper was located in Norwalk, Ohio. This database is a fully searchable text version of the newspaper for the following years: 1830-53 and 1862. > http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=7358 > > Aaron Hill > Seattle
What are you looking for? Bonita Hillmerladybonita@usa.com -------- Original message -------- From: Aaron Hill via <ohhuron@rootsweb.com> Date: 05/30/2016 6:09 PM (GMT-08:00) To: OHHURON@rootsweb.com Subject: [OHHURON] Huron Reflector on Ancestry I am trying to access the Huron Reflector on Ancestry at the library, but the direct link requires a login and, after accessing the site through the library, I cannot find the newspaper. Anyone know how to access it via a library subscription? Huron Reflector (Norwalk, Ohio) The Huron Reflector newspaper was located in Norwalk, Ohio. This database is a fully searchable text version of the newspaper for the following years: 1830-53 and 1862. http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=7358 Aaron Hill Seattle ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to OHHURON-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Francis Marion "Frank" MARVIN was born in 1857 in Williams County, Ohio. He married Ellen Lucretia KIME in 1874 in Fulton County, Ohio. He died in 1919 in Huron County. At the 1910 census, Frank Marvin, age 52, and wife were living on Main Street in Greenwich Village, Huron County, Ohio. His occupation is listed as implement dealer - farm. I'm looking for more information on his business. Was it located on Orchard Street? What years did it operate? Frances Van Scoy FrancesVanScoy@aol.com
Looks like some GAR related paraphernalia http://www.ebay.com/itm/1887-P-C-FISH-MONROEVILLE-OHIO-ID-TAG-/141069464591?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item20d865340f
I am searching for WELLS in Huron, Erie, Lorain Counties, Ohio. My 'brick wall" James Wells b: 13 Mar 1792 (per headstone in Norwalk) came to Ohio after the War of 1812. He was inducted into Capt Jehiel FELT's company in Madison Co., NY and appears to have served about 3 months. I do not know what brought them to Vermillion (now Erie), OH but my first proof that I can be confident it is him ... is the 1830 census. Since the area was part of the Connecticut Firelands Reserve and from DNA, I suspect his father may have been from Connecticut and perhaps lost homesteads ... but, I have never found proof of exactly where he was born (some say NH, NY or CT). From the WELLS Surname DNA Study and the help of a descendent from his youngest son, William Washington WELLS who married Elizabeth STREATOR/STREETER, James Wells has a "common ancestor" (perfect 46 marker match) with proven descendants of Governor Thomas WELLES of Wethersfield, Connecticut. I found a bible that was owned by his grandson that provided the same birth and death of both James WELLS and his wife, Persis EARLE, dau of John EARLE and Mehitable CHASE. They married Dec 1810 in Chester, Windsor Co., Vermont. Several of the their children claim VT (assume Windsor Co.) as their birthplace, the rest claim NY (assume Madison Co.) but I have never found any proof of the birth of James or any of his children. I have Persis' birth record and their marriage record, but nothing else. I have received most of the birth dates from cemetery headstones and obituaries. With the bible and obituaries, I have pieced together all of the children. Most of the children stayed in Ohio, some relocated to Michigan. My ancestor, James Fones "Fones or Fonce" WELLS deserted his wife in Norwalk after the death of their two children (on 1850 Mortality Index and listed in her application for divorce), George and Fonce WELLS of scarlet fever. He relocated to Pennsylvania and ! met and married(?) Widow Mary Catherine (Waters) COBAUGH. They had 4 daughters, one who was my paternal great-grandmother, Mrs. Anna Maria (Wells) HILLMER. I am seeking any siblings or parents of my brick wall, James WELLS, b: 13 Mar 1792. I would also like to learn more about descendants ... I have most down to his grandchildren but would like more on his great-grandchildren. Bonita Hillmer ladybonita@usa.com \\\|/// \\ ~ ~ // ( @ @ ) ----oOOo-(_)-oOOo---- Just Lurking ... Lady Bonita Nevada, USA
Hello list, Do Huron County, Ohio have a place here they keep records for WWI ? I’m looking for information on a John Thomas Walsworth son of Eliza Curtis Walsworth and Sara Maria Smith. John was born about 1884 in Monroeville, Ohio and later moved to Norwalk, Ohio. Linda Reilly
Susan Zacharias, award-winning past editor of Ohio Genealogy News, is teaching a free class at 10 AM this Saturday morning Oct 11th at the Ohio Genealogical Society, 611 State Route 97 W, Bellville (Exit 165 off I-71 just past Der Dutchman). The topic is Newsletter Rescue: Layout, Design, Content. If you are involved with any type of newsletter preparation, genealogy or not, this will be a good class to attend. Stay the day and research in the library and visit the Civil War 150 display.